Holding her controversial book “Silent Spring,” Rachel Carson stands in her library in Silver Springs, Md., on March 14, 1963. She said she wanted to bring to public attention her charges that pesticides are destroying wildlife and endangering the environment.(AP Photo)

Media outlets nationwide have been commemorating the centennial
birthday of Rachel Carson, whose 1962 book "Silent Spring" is considered by many
to be the inspiration for the modern environmental movement. A May 25 commentary
in the Detroit Free Press, for example, credited Carson with begetting the Clean
Water Act, the Endangered Species Act and the Great Lakes Water Quality
Agreement between the United States and Canada.

In fact, a great deal of Carson’s conclusions about human health
and the environment were wrong, more the product of her imagination than proper
scientific research. As noted by John Tierney in The New York Times on June 5,
Carson was wholly incorrect in asserting that there exists no safe dose of
synthetic pesticides. Indeed, Bruce Ames, professor of biochemistry and
molecular biology at the University of California, Berkeley, has determined that
most potential carcinogens are ingested in such small quantities that they have
little to no impact on human health.

Carson’s claims that the pesticide DDT caused cancer in humans
ultimately prompted the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to ban the
pesticide in 1972. However, the DDT ban was responsible for the needless deaths
of tens of millions of people. DDT had been largely responsible for reducing
malaria deaths worldwide, from 1,740 per million in 1930 to 480 per million in
1950 — a 70 percent decrease.

In actuality, the increase in cancer deaths cited by Carson was
due to fewer people dying at young ages from other diseases.

DDT does pose risks to birds such as eagles and other raptors.
But as Tierney points out, Carson "wildly imagined" a "mass biocide" and the
extinction of the robin, which "was an especially odd claim given the large
numbers of robins recorded in Audubon bird counts before her book." Nor was
Carson the first to investigate the impact of pesticides on the environment, as
some devotees claim. The National Academy of Sciences conducted research on
pesticides and the environment long before Carson put pen to paper, according to
Tierney.

There is no doubt that the environment has improved
substantially since the early 1960s, when "Silent Spring" was published. But the
recent accolades heaped upon Carson ignore her most significant contribution to
modern environmentalism: While she imbedded in the public consciousness a
concern for the affects of chemicals on the environment, she also grossly
overstated the risks of pesticides. Unfortunately, her simplistic environmental
theories fomented unfounded fears about synthetic chemicals that persist today.